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STUDIES ON
CHIROPRACTIC
Chiropractic and Back Panic
The number of people
suffering from low back pain at a given time, range between 5% to 30%
of the population. Recent studies have found that back pain is a common
occurrence among school children and adolescents as well.
Low back pain has
a tremendous impact on Canadians and is a major socio-economic burden.
It is one of the leading causes of visits made to health care providers
and of time lost from the workplace. Nearly every scientific study on
any aspect of low back pain refers to it as being the single greatest
area of social and economic loss.
A recent Health Canada
study (Economic Burden of Illness in Canada, 1993) revealed that musculoskeletal
disorders ranked second after cardiovascular disease in terms of highest
cost of burden of illness in Canadian society, at over 17 billion dollars
or 13.8% of the total (direct and indirect) cost of illness in 1993. Musculoskeletal
conditions were found to account for over 35% of indirect costs (over
15 billion dollars) of long-term disability - by far the highest of all
conditions. Morbidity costs due to back and spine long-term disability
were estimated at over 4 billion dollars in 1993.
The total direct costs
attributed to physicians, drugs and hospitals in the management
of musculoskeletal conditions was estimated at roughly 2.5 billion
dollars in 1993. Traditional medical management of back pain has
been costly and ineffective. The need to shift to chiropractic care
for low back pain management becomes even more apparent from a health
policy perspective in light of the high costs, failure of may medical
interventions, concerns about inappropriate surgery, hospitalization
and prescription of drugs, and growing recognition and evidence
of the effectiveness of spinal manipulation.
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